Perhaps by now you have heard that the Vatican is soliciting
people’s input regarding the church’s teachings on family and sexuality. In the United Kingdom, you can take the survey online. Here in the U.S., though, the bishops have
not yet figured out how they will obtain people’s input.
I decided not to wait for the U.S. bishops and took the
online survey offered by the U.K. bishops.
Thanks guys!
Whilst taking the survey I copied the questions into a Word
document before submitting my responses.
I offer them here so that you can prepare yourself for when your bishop
comes seeking your opinion. Or, you can
just take the survey offered by the U.K. because we are after all a catholic
(universal) church.
Be forewarned though - this survey is not for the faint of
heart. It involves writing 39 essays in
response to the 9 multipart questions.
And the questions are written as though you have a master degree in
theology. Not to worry…after I give the
questions as written by the clergy, I provide a simplified version of each.
Also be forewarned that in the 1960s Popes John XXIII and
Paul VI sponsored a pontifical commission and asked its members to give guidance
regarding the church’s teachings about birth control. However, Paul VI completely disregarded their
recommendations to lift the church’s ban on artificial birth control and issued
Humanae Vitae instead which just
re-entrenched the church’s teachings…and consequently led to the largest exodus
from the Church to date at that time.
Thus, do not place too much hope that the Vatican seeking your
opinion means the Vatican will actually heed your advice. It might again just inspire the Vatican to
write another really long document in Latin explaining why you are wrong. The good news is that if that happens, so
many people have already left the church in disgust regarding mishandling of clergy
child rapists that another mass exodus would be difficult to notice.
But, with those warnings issued, I encourage you to
participate. If nothing else, you will
learn the Latin term for “shacking up together.”
Question 1 – actual text
a) Describe how the
Catholic Church's teachings on the value of the family contained in the Bible,
Gaudium et Spes, Familiaris Consortio and other documents of the post-conciliar
Magisterium is understood by people today? What formation is given to our
people on the Church's teaching on family life?
b) In those cases
where the Church's teaching is known, is it accepted fully or are there
difficulties in putting it into practice? If so, what are they?
c) How widespread is
the Church's teaching in pastoral programmes at the national, diocesan and
parish levels? What catechesis is done on the family?
d) To what extent —
and what aspects in particular — is this teaching actually known, accepted,
rejected and/or criticized in areas outside the Church? What are the cultural
factors which hinder the full reception of the Church’s teaching on the family?
Question 1 – My simplified
version
a) Do any Catholics
listen to us when we teach about homosexuals or birth control?
b) Why do people ignore
us on these topics?
c) Is it that we
haven’t explained ourselves clearly?
d) Do even any
non-Catholics listen to us?
Question 2 – actual text
a) What place does the idea of
the natural law have in the cultural areas of society: in institutions,
education, academic circles and among the people at large? What anthropological
ideas underlie the discussion on the natural basis of the family?
b) Is the idea of the natural
law in the union between a man and a woman commonly accepted as such by the
baptized in general?
c) How is the theory and
practice of natural law in the union between man and woman challenged in light
of the formation of a family? How is it proposed and developed in civil and
Church institutions?
d) In cases where non-practicing
Catholics or declared non-believers request the celebration of marriage,
describe how this pastoral challenge is dealt with?
Question 2 – My
simplified version
a) Are Catholics the only
people on the planet still clinging to Aristotle’s incorrect 4th century
B.C. teachings about human biology, reproduction, sexuality and psychology?
b) Oh, wait, do any
Catholics besides us in the Vatican still cling to Aristotle’s incorrect 4th
century B.C. teachings about human biology, reproduction, sexuality and
psychology?
c) What is the new
word on the street about these topics?
d) If lapsed
Catholics or non-Catholics want to get married in a Catholic church, how are
they treated by the clergy and church staff?
Question
3 – actual text
a) What experiences have emerged
in recent decades regarding marriage preparation? What efforts are there to
stimulate the task of evangelization of the couple and of the family? How can
an awareness of the family as the "domestic Church" be promoted?
b) How successful have you been
in proposing a manner of praying within the family which can withstand life’s
complexities and today’s culture?
c) In the current generational
crisis, how have Christian families been able to fulfil their vocation of
transmitting the faith?
d) In what way have
the local Churches and movements on family spirituality been able to create
ways of acting which are exemplary?
e) What specific contribution
can couples and families make to spreading a credible and holistic idea of the
couple and the Christian family today?
f) What pastoral care
has the Church provided in supporting couples in formation and couples in
crisis situations?
Question 3 – My
simplified version
a) When people want
to get married in the Catholic Church how do you use this opportunity to try to
teach them the virtues of Aristotle’s incorrect 4th century B.C. teachings
about human biology, reproduction, sexuality and psychology?
b) Do you pray during
difficult times?
c) Since the younger
generation seems to be fleeing the church at record pace (and we’re sure it’s
not because we allowed priests to rape children and then lied about it, or that
we tell them their gay friends and relatives are devil-spawn) what are the
families that actually keep their kids coming to church doing differently?
d) How have blindly
obedient Catholic elitist groups that give the Vatican shitloads of money like
Opus Dei, Familia (Legion of Christ), Communion and Liberation Movement and
Neo-Catechumenal Way been good examples to all the other lousy parents who let
their kids ask questions and don’t give us nearly as much money?
e) Since we have
somehow lost our credibility with kids (and again, we’re sure it has nothing to
do with letting priests rape children), what can parents and families do to get
kids to join us clinging to Aristotle’s incorrect 4th century B.C. teachings
about human biology, reproduction, sexuality and psychology?
f)What kind of
marriage preparation is required before couples can marry in the Catholic
Church and what kind of counseling is available when married couples have
difficulties?
Question
4 – actual text
a) Is cohabitation ad
experimentum a pastoral reality in your particular Church? Can you approximate
a percentage?
b) Do unions which are not
recognized either religiously or civilly exist? Are reliable statistics
available?
c) Are separated couples and
those divorced and remarried a pastoral reality in your particular Church? Can
you approximate a percentage? How do you deal with this situation in
appropriate pastoral programmes?
d) In all the above cases, how
do the baptized live in this irregular situation? Are they aware of it? Are
they simply indifferent? Do they feel marginalized or suffer from the
impossibility of receiving the sacraments?
e) What questions do divorced
and remarried people pose to the Church concerning the Sacraments of the
Eucharist and of Reconciliation? Among those persons who find themselves in
these situations, how many ask for these sacraments?
f) Could a simplification of
canonical practice in recognizing a declaration of nullity of the marriage bond
provide a positive contribution to solving the problems of the persons
involved? If yes, what form would it take?
g) Does a ministry
exist to attend to these cases? Describe this pastoral ministry? Do such
programmes exist on the national and diocesan levels? How is God’s mercy
proclaimed to separated couples and those divorced and remarried and how does
the Church put into practice her support for them in their journey of faith?
Question 4 – My
simplified version
a) Do Catholics in
your area shack-up together before getting married? What percent do this before getting married?
b) Do Catholics in
your area get married outside the church or enter into same-sex unions of some
sort?
c) Do you have
Catholics who are separated, divorced and/or remarried in your area and if so,
how are they treated by the clergy and parish staff?
d) Regarding the abominations
mentioned above, how on earth can a baptized person do that? Don’t they know they are doing something that’s
an abomination? Don’t they care about
our rules? Do these losers feel that we
don’t want them around or do they suffer because we won’t let them participate
in sacraments like marriage, communion or maybe even deny their kids baptism?
e) How many separated,
married or divorced people ask if they can go to confession and communion and
what other questions do they ask about those two sacraments?
f) If we simplified
the annulment process, would that help make things easier for those
people? How so?
g) Do you have ministries
that tell these people that God is merciful enough to overlook their colossal
sin?
Question
5 – actual text
a) Is there a law in your
country recognizing civil unions for people of the same-sex and equating it in
some way to marriage?
b) What is the attitude of the
local and particular Churches towards both the State as the promoter of civil
unions between persons of the same sex and the people involved in this type of
union?
c) What pastoral attention can
be given to people who have chosen to live in these types of union?
d) In the case of unions of
persons of the same sex who have adopted children, what can be done pastorally
in light of transmitting the faith?
Question 5 – My
simplified version
a) Is gay marriage
legal where you live?
b) What do the local
clergy and bishop think about the government for allowing gay marriage and what
do they think about gays who get married?
c) How the heck are
we supposed to act around gays who get married?
d) What are we
supposed to do about their kids?
Question
6 – actual text
a) What is the estimated
proportion of children and adolescents in these cases, as regards children who
are born and raised in regularly constituted families?
b) How do parents in these situations approach
the Church? What do they ask? Do they request the sacraments only or do they
also want catechesis and the general teaching of religion?
c) How do the particular
Churches attempt to meet the needs of the parents of these children to provide
them with a Christian education?
d) What is the sacramental practice in these cases: preparation,
administration of the sacrament and the accompaniment?
Question 6 – My
simplified version
a) How many kids are
raised in abnormal families such as ones with separated, divorced, remarried or
gay parents versus in normal families?
b) Do these kids’
parents ever even interact with the Church?
Do they just want us to let their kids receive sacraments or are
they willing to send us their kids for religious education so that we can
explain to them what an abnormal situation they live in?
c) How are parishes
trying to help gay parents so that the kids of gay parents come to religious
education or Catholic school?
d) If you do let kids
of gay people receive the sacraments, how are you doing that? Is it in a back alley or in the light of
day? Do you mainstream kids of gay parents
or hold special “kids of gay parents” religious education sessions?
Question
7 – actual text
a) What knowledge do Christians
have today of the teachings of Humanae vitae on responsible parenthood? Are
they aware of how morally to evaluate the different methods of family planning? Could any insights be suggested
in this regard pastorally?
b) Is this moral teaching
accepted? What aspects pose the most difficulties in a large majority of
couple’s accepting this teaching?
c) What natural methods are
promoted by the particular Churches to help spouses put into practice the
teachings of Humanae vitae?
d) What is your experience on
this subject in the practice of the Sacrament of Penance and participation at
the Eucharist?
e) What differences are seen in
this regard between the Church’s teaching and civic education?
f) How can a more open attitude
towards having children be fostered? How can an increase in births be promoted?
Question 7 – My
simplified version
a) Have Catholics and
other Christians read Humanae Vitae, which bans artificial birth control? I mean if they read that brilliant piece of
translated Latin about marital sex written by unmarried men who aren’t supposed
to have sex, wouldn’t they be able to see how sinful using birth control
is? Wouldn’t they be able to see how
much better it is to use Natural Family Planning that requires record keeping
on a woman’s body which rivals security camera monitoring at an airport?
b) Doesn’t anybody
besides us supposedly celibate guys believe that birth control is a sin? Why don’t people believe this?
c) Are both the
rhythm and natural family planning methods taught in your parish?
d) Do people even
confess the use of birth control as a sin anymore? Just look at the size of families…we know
they’re using artificial birth control because despite what we say, natural
family planning doesn’t work worth a darn.
And if they aren’t confessing it are they still having the audacity to
receive communion?
e) How do people view
our teachings about birth control that are based upon Aristotle’s flawed 4th
century B.C. understandings of human biology, reproduction, sexuality and
psychology versus that scientific stuff being taught in the public schools?
f) How can we get
people to have more kids? We need
replacements for the parishioners bleeding from our ranks.
Question
8 – actual text
a) Jesus Christ reveals the mystery
and vocation of the human person. How can the family be a privileged place for
this to happen?
b) What critical situations in
the family today can obstruct a person’s encounter with Christ?
c) To what extent do the many
crises of faith which people can experience affect family life?
Question 8 – My
simplified version
a) I cannot decipher
this… If you can, send me a note. If you can’t, don’t answer it in your essay.
b) Since we know it’s
nothing we did to make the people flee the Church, what is causing them to
leave?
c) When people have a faith crisis, how does this impact the rest of their family?
Question
9 – actual text
What other challenges or
proposals related to the topics in the above questions do you consider urgent
and useful to treat?
Question 9 – My
simplified version
Have we left out any
relevant, important or urgent topics pertaining to gay marriage and/or artificial
birth control?
This survey is not necessary. Surely the bishops already know the answers to these questions. What's needed is not talk but action
ReplyDeleteQuestion 8a: I think that is a very cumbersome way of asking how the familial relationships can help transmit the faith to the children while reinforcing it for the parents. Using the example of Christ as the prime example of who/what a human person is supposed to be. Or perhaps the local parish priest since he stands in persona Christi. Pushing this a half-step further, they want to know how to use the family to propagate more vocations to the priesthood.
ReplyDeleteDear Ewe
DeleteThank you for alerting me - as a UK Catholic who attends Mass every week - to something I knew nothing about!
Although - having looked at the survey, I am not sure I want to know much about it - although I do have a Masters in Theology, I really don't have the time to deal with all this! As Fr John above says, the Bishops *should* already know the answers. However, I suspect they don't... Perhaps counting the numbers of children in modern Catholic families might give them a clue.
you are a clever, clever woman..whether I respond or not, it was enlightening to read your understandable version rather than spiritual narcissistic speak..to think, someone in a black suit or dress actually wrote this drive
ReplyDeleteActually, the hierarchy concern with these concepts and any response they have to them is totally irrelevant to my Catholic faith. My conscience leads me, not someone stuck in a 14th century theology, and certainly moral guidance comes from within, not from those who seem to have no morality except to place burdens on the faithful. Can you say, "hypocritical hierarchy?" Today's Pharisees have no effect on religious life.
ReplyDeleteAs Ewe points out, this is a very badly written questionnaire in which the those asking the questions are clearly not very familiar with the English language ( and not even all that familiar with life on planet Earth.)
ReplyDeleteI mean: "How can an increase in births be promoted?" Seriously?
I also have serious doubts about their response to anything they don't want/ expect to hear but we can but try.
Fran Grubert (UK)
I have completed this questionnaire - every bit as bad as I feared and it took me over an hour. I pointed out at the end that I only found out about it via
ReplyDeletea 'US based blog' (I am in UK) and not via my own churches. Thank you for alerting us to it. I also pointed out that the language is impenetrable (and I have two degrees in Theology) and that consultation needs to be wider and at the level where people are.
Sorry for the delay posting your comments. I was in a country that blocks access to my blog.
ReplyDelete